Cultural Series 2015-2016
Hello, Each year, York College hosts a series of cultural events that are designed to entertain and enlighten members of both the campus and regional communities. Our goal is to provide something for everyone's taste — a variety of concerts, art exhibits, films, lectures and theatrical performances. In addition to showcasing the talents of York College faculty and students, we also host guest experts to introduce and promote discussion of topics that are important to our local and national communities. In keeping with our educational mission and our mission to serve the community, the College makes every effort to allow for a spectrum of ideas and open, serious and respectful dialogue. We welcome community members to our campus for these programs; indeed, it is always our pleasure to host you. Admission is free unless otherwise specified. Pamela Gunter-Smith, Ph.D. President
Please visit www.ycp.edu for additional details on any of these events. If you want information about attending York College as a student, go to www.ycp.edu and view the virtual tour. We look forward to seeing you soon.
Art
Intro
As downtown York’s art district continues to expand and thrive, providing excellent opportunities for YCP students and alumni and other regional artists to exhibit and sell their work, the York College Galleries contributes the vital role of bringing major artists with national and international reputations to York to exhibit and speak about their work. In the last two years alone we have hosted exhibitions by New York-based MacArthur Fellow Judy Pfaff; a major installation by Los Angeles-based Wayne White of Pee-wee’s Playhouse fame; an incredible 5-channel video installation and timely street performance by Chicago-based Jefferson Pinder; Sculpture Magazine-reviewed exhibitions by Andi Steele and Carol Prusa of NC and FL respectively, as well as lectures by Rita Duffy of Northern Ireland, Diane Burko of Philadelphia and Deana Haggag, Director of The Contemporary in Baltimore. Our list of graphic designers who have lectured and served as exhibition jurors includes Rick Valicenti, Ellen Lupton, Paul Sahre, Post Typography, and Matteo Bologna. Our 2015/16 gallery program, profiled in the following pages, offers another great lineup of major artists including Sue Coe, Hank Willis Thomas, Sarah Maple, Gaia and Luba Lukova among several others. The York College Galleries comprises the adjacent Cora Miller and Brossman Galleries in Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall where most of our major exhibitions are held, and the Coni Wolf Gallery at Marketview Arts in downtown York where we host monthly First Friday exhibitions and special events.
Gallery Hours Monday, Tuesday, Friday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday 9:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Saturday, 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Closed on Sundays, Holidays, and when campus is closed. Summer Gallery Hours begin May 22, 2016 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 9:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Friday 9:00 a.m.-11:30 p.m. For additional information about exhibitions and events in the Art Galleries, visit http://galleries.ycp.edu.
1 The Lettering Office features research done during the Spring 2015 sabbatical of Graphic Design faculty member, Melanie M. Rodgers. Rodgers’ main area of interest is how graphic design form can be used to convey the personal narrative, and how this content is interpreted by the viewer. This selection of works, which includes paintings, publications, and objects, is also an investigation into the mechanics and aesthetics of the hand-lettered form. With bits of influence from 20th century sign painting, Victorian wood type, graffiti and underground comics, Rodgers examines word-based storytelling in a variety of formats and media, some one-of-a kind and some as multiples. With a foot in both the applied and fine art worlds, this exhibition is evidence of this artist’s deep, ingrained involvement with words and the letters that make them.
Melanie M. Rodgers: The Lettering Office Exhibition Dates & Location: August 24 – September 19, 2015 Brossman Gallery Artist Lecture: Stop Learning New Things September 3, 5:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall Reception: September 3, 6:30 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Image Credits (l to r): 1. The Knitted Poncho 2. Ode to the No. 2
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Driven: Contemporary American Printmaking Exhibition Dates & Location: August 24 – September 19, 2015 Cora Miller Gallery Artist Demonstration: September 3, 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall (outside) Reception: September 3, 6:30 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Image Credits (l to r): 1. You've Come A Long Way, Baby by Mike Houston 2. Moonshiner by Brandon Sanderson 3. The Endurance by Steven Prohyra
Driven is an exhibition representing the vitality of contemporary American printmaking as experienced by the founders of Drive By Press during their extensive travel around the U.S. The exhibition features the work of artists driven to use printmaking as their primary means of artistic production, including Tom Huck, Dennis McNett, Bill Fick, Ryan O’Malley, The Amazing Hancock Brothers, and Drive By Press co-founders Greg Nanney and Joseph Velasquez. Some artists in the exhibition have been established in the world of printmaking for several decades such as Jack Damer and Oscar J. Gillespie, while others are rising stars in the field. This exhibition is an excellent opportunity to see the work coming out of the strongest academic printmaking programs in the country. The opening reception for the exhibition will be preceded by an afternoon of outdoor printing demonstrations and custom T-shirt printing by Drive By Press. Interested customers may bring their own T-shirts or purchase one from DBP. If you miss this opening event don’t despair, DBP will move their mobile printing operation to Marketview Arts the following day for September’s First Friday in downtown York.
3 Traveling printmaker/educators Drive By Press will set up their mobile printmaking studio at Marketview Arts in Downtown York for September’s First Friday Art Walk. Marketview Arts is part of the York Arts District along Beaver Street between West Market and Philadelphia Streets. Drive By Press will demonstrate printing techniques and print custom T-shirts. Customers can bring their own shirts or purchase one from DBP. The printing demo will run for most of the afternoon and will be followed by a reception for their exhibition of prints in the Coni Wolf Gallery, which is on the 2nd floor of Marketview Arts in the York College Studios.
Hard Pressed: Selections from the DBP Collection First Friday with Drive By Press
Location: York College Galleries at Marketview Arts 37 West Philadelphia Street, York Printing Demonstration: September 4, 2015 3:00 - 8:00 p.m., Marketview Arts Entrance Exhibition/Reception: September 4, 2015 5:00 – 8:00 p.m. Coni Wolf Gallery, York College Studios at Marketview Arts
The exhibition is the largest known collection of contemporary prints, most of which have been donated by faculty and students from the many colleges and universities that DBP has visited over the last several years. The event is free (though the T-shirts are not) and all are welcome to attend.
Image Credits (l to r): 1. Drive By Press exhibit at Marketview Arts 2. Drive By Press printing demo at Marketview Arts
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Perspectives on Peace: Art and Peace-building Exhibition Dates & Location: October 1 – November 14, 2015 York College Galleries Panel Discussion: Art and Conflict October 14, 5:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Reception: October 14, 6:30 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Image Credits (l to r): 1. I Have a Dream by Luba Lukova 2. Untitled (Peace) by Hank Willis Thomas and Terence Nance (video still) 3. Pall Bearers by Lori Waselchuk
Perspectives on Peace is an exhibition of works of art by important contemporary artists that seeks to communicate an aspect of peace rather than a symbolic representation of it. Concerned that most artwork protesting war and violence often relies too heavily on showing violence, co-curators Matthew and Shelly Clay-Robison searched for works that avoid trite symbols and instead actively show one of the following manifestations of peace: Positive peace (creating or building peace, peacemakers); Negative Peace (the absence or cessation of violence); Interpersonal peace (peace or conflict resolution between people); Intrapersonal peace (inner healing, internal non-violence, meditation, etc); Structural Peace (social justice and civil rights); and rebuilding physically and emotionally after violent conflict at the personal, cultural, state, and global levels. The exhibition features an international roster of important artists including Sarah Maple, Hank Willis Thomas and Terence Nance, Luba Lukova, Gaia, Rita Duffy, Jefferson Pinder, and Lori Waselchuk. Art and Conflict will feature experts in the fields of art and conflict, including Ivan Sascha Sheehan, Director of both the Negotiations and Conflict Management program and the Global Affairs and Human Security program at the University of Baltimore.
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Fine Art & Graphic Design: Exhibition Dates & Location: December 4 - 19, 2015 York College Galleries Senior Presentations: December 4, 4:00 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Reception: December 4, 5:30 – 7:00 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Senior Exhibition
This exhibition features the work of students from the Division of Art in their final semester of study at York College. Seniors majoring in Fine Art display their final cohesive bodies of work while Graphic Design majors exhibit their senior projects. The students’ work demonstrates the artistic and conceptual growth they have achieved in our program before leaving to pursue exhibition opportunities and careers as professional graphic designers, illustrators and fine artists. The students work collectively during their final semester to refine their creative vision, and learn to present themselves and their work in a professional manner. This process culminates with the Senior Presentations and Senior Exhibition. The presentations allow the seniors to deliver a professional lecture on their current work before a large public audience, while the exhibition requires them to make aesthetic choices in presenting their work in a professional gallery setting. The seniors’ PechaKuchastyle presentations begin at 4:00 p.m. in DeMeester Recital Hall. A reception and portfolio review will follow the presentations in the Wolf Hall lobby and York College Galleries.
Image Credits (l to r): Work by Jess Velarde '14, 1st Place winner in Fall 2014 exhibition
Sue Coe:
6 Porkopolis: Animals and Industry
Exhibition Dates & Location: January 20 – February 20, 2016 Cora Miller Gallery Artist Lecture: January 28, 5:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Reception: January 28, 6:30 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Image Credits (l to r): 1. Modern Man followed by the Ghosts of his Meat 2. Selection for Slaughter
"Hogs are among the top 10 most intelligent species, along with humans, dolphins, whales, etc. (Dogs are not even in the top 10.) With a natural life span of about 15 years, undomesticated hogs have a highly complex social structure. Living together in groups, they are constantly on the move, building sleeping nests and foraging for food. Hogs are naturally very curious and 'play' is an integral part of their lives." – Mandy Coe, from Sue Coe's pamphlet, Porkopolis. Sue Coe’s Porkopolis: Animals and Industry remains as relevant today as when it was first exhibited at Galerie St. Etienne in New York in 1989. Coe grew up near a slaughterhouse and her interest in the practices of the meat industry led her to investigate factory farming operations in the U.S. from which she developed a passion for animal rights and a need to bring awareness to factory farming’s cruelty to animals, workers, and the environment through her art. This exhibition comprises more than four dozen large-scale works on paper that connect the practices of the meat industry with human needs for land, water, and food going unmet, environmental degradation like soil erosion and deforestation, and high levels of antibiotics in the food supply, issues that continue to demand our attention.
7 This exhibition features original drawings from artist Sue Coe’s book Pit’s Letter, published in 2000. In Pit’s Letter, as the publisher Four Walls Eight Windows explains, a hapless canine describes her desolate life to her only surviving sister. She recounts her puppyhood and upbringing in her human family, her heartless banishment, and finally her suffering and death at the hands of the experimenting scientists at Eden Biotechnology. Ironically, her former master winds up in the same situation: an accidental scratching infects him with a pathogen - and man and beast share the same fate.
Sue Coe:
Pit’s Letter
Exhibition Dates & Location: January 20 – February 20, 2016 Brossman Gallery Artist Lecture: January 28, 5:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Reception and Book Signing: January 28, 6:30 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Pit’s Letter is emblematic of Sue Coe’s deep concern for the welfare of animals and will likely resonate with dog lovers, particularly owners of pit bulls. Coe’s work is blunt and confrontational, reflecting the passion she feels for her subject matter, and calls to mind the work of artists such as Kåthe Kollwitz, Francisco de Goya, and José Guadalupe Posada. This exhibition will run alongside a larger body of Coe’s work called Porkopolis in the adjacent Cora Miller Gallery.
Image Credits (l to r): 1: Pit’s Letter book cover 2: Millennium
Sue Coe:
8 Graphic Witness
Artist Lecture: January 28, 2016, 5:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Reception: January 28, 6:30 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Sue Coe, an English artist living in New York, will speak about her body of work spanning more than four decades. Coe, whose work as a fine artist and illustrator frequently overlaps, works in a variety of media and is best known for her painting, drawing, and printmaking. Strongly influenced by the direct political engagement found in the work of German Expressionist artists like Otto Dix and KĂĽthe Kollwitz, Coe takes on a range of sociopolitical topics including racism, oppressive work conditions, U.S. foreign policy, and cruelty to animals. Legendary art critic Donald Kuspit has called Coe “the greatest living practitioner of confrontational, revolutionary art." Coe studied at Chelsea School of Art, London, and the Royal College of Art. Upon graduating she moved to New York City, where she taught at the School of Visual Arts and produced illustrations for magazines and newspapers, including The New York Times. Coe has exhibited extensively throughout the U.S. and internationally, and her work is in the collections of many major institutions including the Museum of Modern Art and Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the Walker Art Center, and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. She is represented by Galerie St. Etienne in New York.
Image Credits (l to r): 1. Factory Pharm, The animals went insane 2. Butcher to the World 3. Go Vegan and Nobody Gets Hurt
9 New York-based Luba Lukova will discuss her internationally recognized work, known for its distinctive use of metaphors, juxtaposition of symbols, and economy of line and text, to succinctly capture humanity's elemental themes. Lukova is author of critically acclaimed Social Justice portfolio, and her posters have been exhibited around the world. Her solo exhibitions include: UNESCO in Paris, France; DDD Gallery in Osaka, Japan; La MaMa Gallery in New York, and the Art Institute of Boston. Her works are in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York; the National Library of France in Paris; the Library of Congress; and the World Bank in Washington, D.C. She has received commissions from Harvard and Columbia Universities, Sony Music, United Airlines, The New York Times, and the War Resisters League.
Luba Lukova: Graphic Guts Visiting Artist Lecture: February 24, 2016, 5:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Reception: February 24, 6:30 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Lukova has received numerous awards including the Grand Prix Savignac at the International Poster Salon, Paris; ICOGRADA Excellence Award; and the Reisman Foundation grant. Most recently, she was number one in the Huffington Post's review "15 Women Artists Who Have Left Their Mark On Modern Design." Image Credits (l to r): 1. Luba Lukova 2. Ecology 3. Income Gap
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Rebecca Morgan: No Church in the Wild Visiting Artist Lecture: February 25, 2016, 5:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Reception: February 25, 5:00 p.m. Evelyn & Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Rebecca Morgan is from central PA, and her paintings, drawings, and ceramics emanate from stereotypes of rural Appalachia. Humorous, benevolent, and savage at turns, her characters touch on truths about poverty, addiction, and off-the-grid living, as well as idealizations of uncultured country life. Stylistically, Morgan embraces hyper-detailed naturalism, influenced by Dutch painters such as Memling, Brueghel and Van Eyck, as well as absurd, repulsive caricatures suggestive of underground cartoonists like R. Crumb. As an on-and-off-again New Yorker, Morgan represents the ultimate insider/outsider point of view, embracing and critically distancing herself from her origins. Morgan received a B.A. from Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania and her M.F.A. from Pratt Institute, NY. Exhibitions include Gasser Grunert Gallery, NY; Richard Heller Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Vox Populi Gallery, Philadelphia, PA; Montclair State University, Montclair, NJ; Whitdel Arts, Detroit, MI; Coop Gallery, Nashville, TN; and Spring Break, NY. Morgan is represented by Asya Geisberg Gallery in NY.
Image Credits (l to r): 1. Prize Jugs 2. Odalisque 3. Depression Blanket 4. Rebecca Morgan
11 The Annual Juried Student Exhibition features selected work from students taking courses in fine art and graphic design at York College. Students submit their work for consideration, and our guest jurors select works that are exceptional, represent our program, and exhibit well together. This year, our graphic design juror is New York-based Luba Lukova, and our fine art juror is central PA native, New York-based Rebecca Morgan. Awards chosen by the jurors will be announced at the opening reception at 5:30 p.m., in the Cora Miller Gallery.
Annual Juried Student Exhibition Exhibition Dates & Location: March 10 – 23, 2016 Reception: March 10, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. York College Galleries Graphic Design Juror: Luba Lukova Fine Art Juror: Rebecca Morgan
Graphic Design juror Luba Lukova's work has been exhibited around the world, and is in major collections, including Denver Art Museum; the Museum of Fine Arts in Mons, Belgium; and the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. Fine Art juror Rebecca Morgan has received a great deal of critical success and media attention for what The New York Times critic Roberta Smith calls her "remorselessly detailed self-caricatures." Morgan represents the ultimate insider/ outsider point of view, embracing and critically distancing herself from her origins in her work.
Image Credits (l to r): 1. Work by Mariah Hertz '15, Juror’s Choice award winner at 2015 AJSE 2. Work by Anya Felch '15, Juror’s Choice award winner at 2015 AJSE
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Graphic Design
Fine Art
Senior Exhibition:
Senior Exhibition: Exhibition Dates & Location: April 1 - 14, 2016 York College Galleries
Exhibition Dates & Location: April 22 – May 7, 2016 York College Galleries
Senior Presentations: April 1, 4:00 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
Senior Presentations: April 22, 4:00 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
Reception: April 1, 5:30 – 7:00 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby The Graphic Design Senior Exhibition features the work of Graphic Design majors in their final semester of study at York College. The students present their senior projects, demonstrating the artistic and conceptual growth they have achieved in our program before leaving to pursue careers as professional graphic designers. The projects exhibited begin with the introduction of a common design problem, which the students interpret individually and then spend a semester conceiving of and developing their projects. The Art Division faculty votes for the projects they feel have the strongest balance of concept, craft, color, typography, and design. Awards will be presented to the three top vote recipients at 6:00 p.m. in the Cora Miller Gallery.The seniors will give PechaKucha-style presentations beginning at 4:00 p.m. in DeMeester Recital Hall.
Opening Reception: April 22, 5:30 – 7:00 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby The Fine Art Senior Exhibition features the work of fine art majors in their final semester. The students present their bodies of work, demonstrating the artistic and conceptual growth they have achieved in our program. The seniors work collectively during their final semester to refine their creative vision and learn to present themselves and their work in a professional manner. The Art Division faculty votes to award three Rottler Award winners based on conceptual strength, skillful and inventive use of materials, thematic coherence, and formal qualities of the work. The seniors will give PechaKuchastyle presentations.
Image Credits (t to b): 1. Graphic Design by Ryan Kurz ’15 2. Painting by Korie Endicott '15
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"My grandmother was a knitter, a sewer, a watercolor painter, a baker, an embroiderer — she was a woman, she was a maker. And, although she passed away before I got to know her, I inherited her passion for the handmade … I am a product of two worlds: the physical one I inherited and the digital one that I grew up with. This body of work juxtaposes both worlds." – Anya Felch '15 In May 2015, Anya Felch was awarded the fourth annual Appell Arts Fellowship, a residency program open to recent York College graduates that provides housing, parking, studio space, and a stipend. This exhibition is the culmination of a year's worth of artistic production made possible by this fellowship. Felch earned bachelor's degrees in Graphic Design in 2014 and Fine Arts in 2015. She received First Place in the 2015 Fine Art Senior Exhibition and Third Place in the 2014 Graphic Design Senior Exhibition. She also received a Juror's Choice Award in the 2015 Annual Juried Student Exhibition from fine art juror Deana Haggag, and First Place Award in the 2013 Annual Juried Student Exhibition by graphic design juror Paul Sahre.
Anya Felch '15: Appell Fellowship Exhibition Exhibition Dates & Location: June 9 – July 2, 2016 York College Galleries Artist Talk: June 9, 6:00 p.m. Cora Miller Gallery Reception: June 9, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
Music
Intro
For additional information on any music events, please visit www.ycp.edu/music or call the Department of Communication and the Arts at 717-815-1354.
The York College Division of Music is proud to present another season of exciting performances. The 20152016 academic year will feature events in two locations: the 700seat Waldner Performing Arts Center and the 200-seat DeMeester Recital Hall. All of the following events are free and open to the public. The 2015-2016 series will be highlighted by several exciting guest artist performances, made possible by a generous gift from the Boustead Family Foundation. The season will include residencies and performances by the acclaimed Axiom Brass Quintet and the Lydian String Quartet, one of the great American string quartets of the past 30 years. In addition, the 2015-2016 season will feature several performances by York College's talented faculty artists, including flutist Alicia Kosack, mezzo-soprano Erin Lippard, and Jon Moyer's Nittany Trombone Quartet. The York Chamber Players, YCP's faculty ensemble-in-residence, will present three concerts, including a collaboration with Malavika Godbole’s Mobius Percussion Quartet. As always, talented student ensembles will grace the stages, and the season will culminate in spring performances of The Pirates of Penzance.
1 Ron Brendel's performances have been deemed "effortlessly professional … thrilling … solid … robust yet lyrical" across genres. The tenor includes Tamino, Peter Quint, Nanki-Poo, Ferrando, Nemorino, Ernesto, and many others in his list of roles. He also performs widely in oratorio and recital. Brendel has performed and spoken on a variety of topics related to the music of Benjamin Britten from Liverpool to New Zealand and the U.S. He is on the voice faculty at Lee University in TN, and with his wife, founded and directs the Schumann Liederfest in Zwickau, Germany. Brendel's recital will feature music by Handel, Schumann, Verdi, Cole Porter, and others.
Guest Artist Recital: Ron Brendel, Tenor September 18, 2015, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
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York Chamber Players
A Division of Music Showcase
Alicia Kosack, Flute
Faculty Recital
Prism Concert
Faculty Recital
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Italian Songs and Arias YCP Community of Singers
September 27, 2015, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
October 3, 2015, 4:00 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
October 23, 2015, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
October 29, 2015, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
The York Chamber Players, York College's faculty ensemble-inresidence, will present a concert of masterworks for strings and piano by Beethoven, Schumann, and FaurĂŠ.
The Fall Fest program will feature a wide range of talented performers from the York College Division of Music, including students, faculty, large and small ensembles.
Written in 1973, Claude Bolling's Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano Trio is a mix of classical and jazz. Flutist Alicia Kosack and pianist Kenneth Osowski will be joined by Brian Krauss (bass) and Jeff Stabley (drums).
Originally published in 1894, the G. Schirmer collection of 24 Italian Songs and Arias has been a pedagogical staple in the classical vocal repertoire for well over a century.
Terry Botwick has held several highimpact positions, including President of Vanguard Films & Animation, President and COO of Big Idea Productions (VeggieTales), SVP of Programming for CBS, President of Distribution and National Programming for the Hearst Corporation, and VP of The Family Channel. As SVP for CBS Entertainment, Botwick provided oversight for all prime time series programming, as well as the network's special events, such as the Grammy Awards, Tony Awards, Daytime and Primetime Emmy Awards. During his years with CBN CBS, he participated in the renaming and repositioning of the network to the Family Channel, one of the leading cable programming services in the world.
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Guest Lecture: Terry Botwick, Film and Television Executive
November 5, 2015, 7:30 p.m., Weinstock Lecture Hall
In 2003, Botwick founded Thunderpoint Studios to finance and produce a portfolio of 20 theatrical movies predominantly targeted to PG-13 and less restrictive audiences. Thunderpoint entered into a partnership with John H. Williams (Shrek, Shrek 2) and his company, Vanguard. A forward-thinking executive, Botwick has an eclectic resume of broad-ranging success within the entertainment industry.
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Guest Artist Concert: Axiom Brass November 7, 2015, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall This concert is made possible by a generous gift from the Boustead Family Foundation.
Winners of the Passau International Competition for Brass Instruments (2012), the Chamber Music Yellow Springs Competition (2012), the International Brass Chamber Music Competition (2008), and the Fischoff Educator Award (2011), Axiom Brass is a Chicago-based quintet dedicated to enriching the lives of its audiences, as well as to educating future musicians and appreciators of great music. Axiom's broadly appealing repertoire includes traditional brass quintets, string quartet transcriptions, early music, and unique arrangements of American and Latin jazz. The ensemble's commitment to new music has led to several world premieres and ongoing commissioning projects. Axiom Brass is an Ensemblein-Residence at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute, Rush Hour Concerts' Back of the Yards program in Chicago, and they perform exclusively on Mutec Mutes and S. E. Shires Trumpets and Trombones.
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Wind Symphony James Colonna, Director
November 8, 2015 and March 20, 2016 3:00 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
Under the dynamic leadership of conductor James Colonna, the York College Wind Symphony is comprised of the College's finest student instrumentalists. The group performs repertoire spanning a wide range of styles and historical periods including marches, British band classics, transcriptions, medleys, and contemporary music.
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Common Ground
Jeff Stabley, Director
Fall Choral Concert Grace Muzzo & Christine Kates, Directors
Groove Ensemble
November 15, 2015, 3:00 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
November 19, 2015 and April 21, 2016 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
Music is a powerful social force for peace and unity. The York College Chorale, Chamber Singers and Voca Bella will explore music that expresses common themes in human experience; music that brings people together in a world that constantly divides. These themes will be reflected by music from a number of different cultures and traditions.
The York College Groove Ensemble is a percussion ensemble with a twist. It includes many traditional percussion instruments, as well as guitars, basses, keyboards, digital samplers, electronic drum machines, and turntables. Groove performs traditional music from around the world, from Zimbabwean dance music to hip-hop.
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Jeff Stabley, Director
The York Chamber Players Perform Music for Woodwinds & Piano
November 20, 2015 and April 22, 2016, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
November 22, 2015, 3:00 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
The York College Jazz Ensemble performs a wide variety of music by the jazz greats, including Miles Davis, Charles Mingus, Count Basie and Duke Ellington. Students are featured in both written arrangements and spontaneous improvisations. The ensemble performs in various jazz idioms, including swing, bebop, and fusion.
This program will feature masterpieces for winds and piano composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Francis Poulenc. Mozart spoke highly of his Quintet in E flat major for Piano and Winds: "I myself consider it to be the best thing I have written in my life." Mozart's Quintet will be followed by one of Poulenc's best-known Chamber works, Sextet for Piano and Wind Quintet.
Jazz Ensemble
Faculty Recital
The Nittany Trombone Quartet is Bruce Tychinski, alto and tenor trombones (Professor of Trombone, University of Delaware); Sean Reusch, tenor trombone (freelance musician and co-founder of the Presidio Brass, San Diego CA); Jon Moyer, tenor trombone (Music Department Chair and Intermediate Band Director, Central York School District, PA, and Adjunct Professor of Low Brass, York College of PA); and Matt Neff, bass trombone (Bass trombonist of U.S. Navy Commodores Jazz Band, Adjunct Professor of Trombone, George Mason University). The Nittany Trombone Quartet was formed by four freshmen at Penn State University in January 1988, becoming frequent performers on campus and the East Coast. The NTQ was one of the national finalists in the MTNA Wurlitzer National Chamber Music Competition, representing the northeast region. Following graduation, the members' individual careers sent them in four different directions, but they remain in close contact and perform together whenever possible, including workshops, concerts, and master classes throughout the U.S. This concert of holiday music, from the group's CD Christmas with the Nittany Trombone Quartet, features all-original contemporary arrangements composed by members of the quartet and colleagues.
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Guest Artist Recital: Nittany Trombone Quartet
December 1, 2015, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
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Community Orchestra
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Holiday Festival Student Piano & Chamber Music Concert
Zachary Levi, Director
James Colonna and Grace Muzzo, Directors
December 12, 2015, 3:00 p.m. and May 7, 2016, 3:00 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
December 13, 2015, 3:00 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
Conducted by Zachary Levi, the York College Community Orchestra is a full symphonic orchestra. The group includes music majors, non-music majors and musicians from York and the surrounding area.
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York College's most popular concert! This annual holiday musical performance features the York College Chorale and Wind Symphony. Bring your family and enjoy the holiday spirit with both secular and sacred music of the season, topped off with an audience sing-along at the conclusion of this festive program.
Invitation to the Dance
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Faculty Recital
Songs of Shakespeare
February 11, 2016, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
December 14, 2015, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
Students from the York College Division of Music and the York College Preparatory Community Music School will present a recital of dance-inspired music, including minuets, waltzes, gigues, and tangos.
The verses of William Shakespeare have provided lyrical musings to countless composers over the last four centuries. As the calendar approaches the 400th anniversary of his death, mezzosoprano Erin Lippard, pianist Kenneth Osowski, and scholar Dominic DelliCarpini present a lecture recital of songs with texts by the famous playwright.
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The new millennium brought with it seminal changes in technology, creating an ever-changing paradigm that leaves business and legal experts struggling to keep pace. Professionals must remain current and forwardthinking, as they attempt to navigate the new economic landscape.
Guest Lecture by Jay L. Cooper, Entertainment Attorney
Entertainment attorney Jay L. Cooper focuses his practice on music industry, motion picture, television, Internet, multimedia, and intellectual property issues. He is recognized internationally as a leading expert on copyright law pertaining to music. A former professional musician, he worked with stars such as Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole. He also played with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Cooper now counsels clients such as Jerry Seinfeld, Katy Perry, screenwriter David Seidler (The King's Speech), and Sheryl Crow. In the 1960s, he represented bands such as the Monkees, the Byrds and Buffalo Springfield. He will discuss the various challenges associated with music industry e-commerce, licensing and the legal process.
March 10, 2016, 7:30 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
Simplicity, the Other Side of Complexity: Music, Law and the Future of E-Commerce Cosponsored by the Department of Communication and the Arts and the Graham School of Business
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The York Chamber Players & Mobius Percussion
Grace Muzzo & Christine Kates, Directors
Malavika Godbole, Director
Faculty/Guest Recital
March 11, 2016, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
The York Chamber Players, York College's faculty ensemble-in-residence, presents an eclectic program of contemporary American music. The ensemble will collaborate with Mobius Percussion for a performance of Steve Reich's Sextet. Also featured will be music by Lou Harrison, as well as a new composition by YCP's own James Colonna.
Chamber Voices April 8, 2016, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
Join us for an informal evening of musicmaking with York College's smaller ensembles. Both faculty-led (The Chamber Singers and Voca Bella) and student-led (Rhapsody, etc.) ensembles will present a varied program of a cappella, vocal pop and traditional styles in the intimate setting of DeMeester Recital Hall.
Percussion Ensemble
April 14, 2016, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
The York College Percussion Ensemble incorporates a variety of works into their repertoire, ranging from xylophone rags from the early 1900s to minimalist classics and avant-garde improvisations.
Since 1980, the Lydian String Quartet has embraced the full range of string quartet repertory with curiosity, virtuosity, and dedication to the highest artistic ideals of music making. The LSQ has inspired critical acclaim worldwide. According to Sunil Freeman of The Washington Post, "They revealed a fire that makes all timeless music forever contemporary." Jeremy Eichler of The Boston Globe has described their playing as "full of subtlety, tonal refinement, and a sense of accumulated musical wisdom." Their interpretive mastery of standard and contemporary repertoire has resulted in prizes at international competitions in Canada, France, England, and in New York (Naumburg Award for Chamber Music), and concerts throughout the U.S. and abroad. Their recordings reflect their diverse and far-reaching repertoire, including works by Beethoven, Brahms, Ives, Schubert, as well as American composers Harbison, Hyla, Ornstein and Wyner. The Quartet hosts a biennial composition prize, and it is on the faculty of Brandeis University in Waltham, MA.
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Guest Artist Recital: The Lydian String Quartet
April 15, 2016, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall This concert is made possible by a generous gift from the Boustead Family Foundation.
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Grace Muzzo, Director
Erin Lippard, Director
April 17, 2016, 3:00 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
April 28, , 29, 30, 2016, 7:30 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
Spring Pops
Join the Chorale and the Chamber Singers in a lighthearted program featuring music from great American popular traditions: jazz, Broadway, folk, and rock.
The Pirates of Penzance
The York College Divisions of Music and Theatre present one of Gilbert and Sullivan’s most popular operettas: The Pirates of Penzance. This hilarious farce is a classic tale of confused birthright and mistaken identity. Privilege is pitted against wit as a rollicking band of tenderhearted pirates are thwarted by an aristocratic flock of sisters. A forbidden love affair emerges, complicated significantly by an undeniable sense of duty honored by every endearing character in the cast. The clever lyrics and tuneful melodies complement the absurd, sophisticated humor accessible to audiences of all ages. Tickets are required. For more information, go to www.ycp.edu/music.
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Student Piano & Chamber Music
A Little Night Music
May 5, 2016, 7:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
Students from the York College Division of Music and the York College Preparatory Community Music School will present a recital of music inspired by and evocative of the night.
"We find ourselves housed and displaced within language with metrics of value that not only cannot gauge well what we do, but have so monopolized the field of value that they threaten to consign what we do to oblivion." — Judith Butler, "Ordinary, Incredulous" The "public humanities" represents a wide range of creative and critical activity and thought that attempts to link a humanistic tradition of inquiry and experimentation to the civic space. As the American philosopher and gender theorist Judith Butler observes, the success of this linkage depends largely on the humanities' ability to explain and demonstrate its value to the public at large. Moreover, as a matter of urgency, the humanities need to continually (re)define the "public worth" of creativity and thinking for future "regimes of value." The 2015-2016 Humanities Lecture Series theme, "The Public Humanities," will feature internationally recognized figures in the field of public humanities and civic engagement. In addition to our guest speakers, the Humanities Lecture Series will have two interdisciplinary panel discussions (fall and spring) on the concept and practice of the public arts and humanities.
Humanities
Intro
The Public Humanities Series
Lectures and panels are free and open to the public. For further details, please call 717-815-1349
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Public Humanities Panel Discussion 1: Defining the Public Arts and Humanities
September 9, 2015, 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218
Panelists (l to r): Ken Osowski, Communication and the Arts, YCP; Victor Taylor, English and Humanities, YCP; and Lynn Tomlinson, Electronic Media and Film, Towson University.
The American Council of Learned Societies' National Task Force on Scholarship and the Public Humanities concluded that "the humanities . . . are valuable for their own sake and the nation must support and sustain scholarship because that enriches the common fund of knowledge. [Additionally] we must 'make the walls separating scholarship and society more permeable,' . . . so that knowledge becomes a public resource." This statement about the humanities from the ACLS defines what many consider to be the central problem of the humanities . . . making connections to the public interest. Panelists will discuss the importance of the humanities' role in promoting the "public good" and removing the institutional and ideological "walls" separating the arts and humanities from the civic space.
Doris Sommer is an internationally recognized figure in the area of public arts and civic engagement. Her scholarship appears at the forefront of public humanities studies. She is the author of The Work of Art in the World: Civic Agency and Public Humanities (2014), Bilingual Aesthetics: A New Sentimental Education (2004), Proceed with Caution, When Engaged by Minority Writing in the Americas (1999), and Foundational Fictions: The National Romances of Latin America. (1993). She is the editor of Cultural Agency in the Americas (2005) and Bilingual Games: Some Literary Investigations (2004).
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Public Humanities Guest Speaker: Doris Sommer
Ira Jewell Williams, Jr. Professor of Romance Languages and Literature, Harvard University The Work of Art in the World: Civic Agency and Public Humanities September 17, 2015 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218
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Public Humanities Guest Speaker: Juanamaría Cordones-Cook Catherine Paine Middlebush Professor of Romance Languages and Filmmaker, University of Missouri Afro-Cuban Artists and the Culture of Resistance
March 17, 2016 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218
Juanamaría Cordones-Cook is an internationally recognized expert in Afro-Hispanic art, film and culture. She has published extensively on contemporary Spanish-American literature and culture, with special interest on Afro-Hispanic writers in major national and international journals in the U.S., Canada, Europe and Latin America. Her articles have appeared in Revista Iberoamericana, Théatre, Chasqui, World Literature Today, Revista del Vigía, Hispamérica, Revista de Estudios Canadienses, Hispanófila, Plural, La Palabra y el Hombre, Revista Unión, Conjunto, Casa de las Américas, Anales del Caribe, among other major publications. She works on projects related to postcolonial theories and issues of identity, race, and gender as they relate to the Afro-Latin American Diaspora. Cordones-Cook also explores the way in which writers incorporate the cultural and political processes of their regions into their works. She is presently working on a book-length study of a generation of Afro-Cuban writers and artists who came of age with the Cuban Revolution, Havana’s Black Renaissance, as well as on La silla dorada, an anthology of poetry by Nancy Morejón accompanied by an audiovisual of her poetry reading, and a collection of essays on Ediciones
4 What does it mean to "practice" the arts and humanities? The Greek origins of the word tell us that to practice, or be practical, is to be concerned with the actual doing or use of something. Within an academic setting, practice might be demonstrated through the application of research, for example, or by the knowledge acquired through hands-on experience. Although usually not considered practical disciplines, in fact the arts and humanities "do" many things, including bringing creative opportunities to people who may lack these in their lives; providing contexts that inspire people to greater creativity and freedom of thought, as well as inner reflection; and showing people a larger world in which creative production is encouraged and nurtured. Panel members will discuss the diverse ways in which they and their students practice the arts and humanities beyond the classroom.
Public Humanities Panel Discussion 2: Practicing the Public Arts and Humanities April 13, 2016 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218 Panelists: Rory Kraft, English and Humanities, YCP; Peter Levy, History and Political Science, YCP, and Erec Smith, English and Humanities, YCP, Melanie M. Rodgers, Communication and the Arts, YCP
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Visiting Writer Lecture: Justina Ireland September 17, 2015 5:00 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Art Galleries
Justina Ireland is a YA novelist living in PA, and says, "I write books about dangerous girls and the boys (and sometimes girls) who dig them." In her debut novel, Vengeance Bound (Simon & Schuster, 2013), she was inspired by the mythological, especially the Furies. Kirkus Reviews described Vengeance Bound as "Buffy meets Dexter with a sprinkling of Aeschylus." Her second book, Promise of Shadows (Simon & Schuster), an elaborate Greek-mythology-based fantasy, was published in 2014, and called "A dark, slyly funny read."
Christopher DeWeese grew up in Port Townsend, WA, and attended Oberlin College and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. After graduating from Oberlin in 2001, he spent three years as a performing member of the Incognito Travelling Circus, touring around the country while continuing to write poems and fiction. His poems have appeared widely in literary journals and magazines including Boston Review, Fence, FIELD, Granta, and Tin House. Prior to teaching at Wright State University — where he is currently an Assistant Professor of Poetry — DeWeese taught at Agnes Scott College, Emory University, and Smith College. His first book of poetry, The Black Forest, was published in 2012 by Octopus Books, and his second collection, The Father of the Arrow is the Thought, is due out in 2015 from Octopus. James Tate said of the poems in The Black Forest, "These poems sock home truth and enact poetic somersaults that leave me out of breath. It's a pleasure to recommend them to anyone brave enough. Chris DeWeese is the real thing, a poet true to his calling."
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Visiting Writer Lecture: Christopher DeWeese
October 29, 2015 5:00 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Art Galleries
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Visiting Writer Lecture: Ryan Britt February 18, 2016 5:00 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Art Galleries
Ryan Britt's writing has appeared in The New York Times, VICE, The Awl, Story, Electric Literature, Nerve, Omni, Clarkesworld, The MindHut, The Barnes and Noble Book Blog, Tor.com, and elsewhere. Ryan has told stories on stage with The Moth, The Liar Show, RISK! He is the co-curator of two live reading series: Lust for Genre and The Hi-Fi Reading Series. He has taught for The Gotham Writers' Workshop, The Sackett Street Writers' Workshop, and teaches privately. Ryan's first book, the essay collection Luke Skywalker Can't Read and Other Geeky Truths, will be published by Plume (an imprint of Penguin Random House) on November 24, 2015.
The annual Humanities Film Series at York College is an interdisciplinary program sponsored by the English and Humanities Department and the Office of the Dean of Academic Affairs. Its aim is to promote the humanities on campus and in the surrounding community by fostering a serious and ongoing discussion about cinema. All too often movies are treated as a "disposable" form of entertainment in our culture; once watched, they are soon forgotten, leaving no lasting impression and prompting little in the way of meaningful dialogue. The Film Series seeks to change this by presenting movies in an academic context, one in which the audience can learn about the various aesthetic, social, and historical dimensions of cinema, while also having the opportunity to discuss the nature of the medium and its effects. The Film Series consists of six events scheduled throughout the academic year that are free and open to the entire college and the surrounding community. At each of these events, a guest speaker screens a film or delivers a lecture on cinema, and then leads a discussion. Guest speakers include acclaimed directors, writers, producers, and actors, as well as noted authors, critics, and professors.
Film
Intro
For more information please call 717-815-1349.
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Z for Zachariah with Director Craig Zobel September 24, 2015 7:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218
Based on the 1974 postapocalyptic novel of the same title, Z for Zachariah (2014) tells the story of the end of humanity. In the wake of a disaster that wipes out most of civilization, Ann Burden (Margot Robbie), a young woman who believes she is the last human on Earth, meets a dying scientist, Loomis (Chiwetel Ejiofor), who is searching for survivors. Their relationship becomes tenuous when another male survivor, Caleb (Chris Pine), appears. As the two men compete for the woman's affection, their primal urges begin to reveal their true nature. The movie, which premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival, is the third feature directed by Craig Zobel, who also made the critically acclaimed Great World of Sound (2007) and Compliance (2012). In Z for Zachariah, he utilizes his full repertoire as a director, unleashing a forceful drama that explores the nature of man . . . and woman. Zobel will be on hand to present his latest movie and answer questions about it after the screening.
A Most Violent Year (2014) is a searing crime drama set in New York City during the winter of 1981, statistically the most dangerous year in the city's history. From lauded writer/director J. C. Chandor, and starring Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain, this gripping story plays out within a maze of rampant political and industrial corruption plaguing the streets of a city in decay. It examines one immigrant's determined climb up a morally crooked ladder, where simmering rivalries and unprovoked attacks threaten his business, his family, and – above all – his own unwavering belief in the righteousness of his path. With A Most Violent Year, Chandor, whose previous films include Margin Call (2011) and All Is Lost (2013), journeys in a bold new direction. The film was co-produced by Chandor's longtime collaborator, York native Neal Dodson. In a special appearance cosponsored by the Humanities Film Series and the Literature/Film Association, Dodson will screen the movie and lead a Q&A.
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A Most Violent Year with Producer Neal Dodson
October 15, 2015 7:00 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
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Hollidaysburg with Director Anna Martemucci November 19, 2015 7:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218
In Hollidaysburg (2014), Tori Humilovich (Rachel Keller) returns to her small town, Hollidaysburg, for Thanksgiving break after her first semester at college, and learns quickly that the more things change since graduating high school, the more they stay the same. But Tori's holiday is brightened by a burgeoning romance with the coolest kid from her high school, who has one last weekend to say goodbye to his favorite burg forever. The movie was produced as part of the Starz documentary TV series The Chair, which followed two first-time directors, Anna Martemucci and Shane Dawson, who were given the opportunity to direct separate films adapted from the same original screenplay. Hollidaysburg was the version created by Martemucci, a writer, actor, and filmmaker, who previously co-wrote, produced, and starred in the independent comedy Breakup at a Wedding (2013), and was a co-creator of the cult web series Periods. She will introduce her movie and talk after the screening about the experience of directing her first film and having every aspect of its production documented for a television show.
Writer/director Justin Simien's debut film, Dear White People (2014), offers a timely and provocative look at race in higher education today. At prestigious Winchester University, biracial student Samantha White (Tessa Thompson) begins her radio show, "Dear White People, the minimum number of black friends needed to not seem racist has just been raised to two. Sorry, but your weed dealer, Tyrone, doesn't count." Sam becomes president of the allblack residential hall, ArmstrongParker House, whose existence is facing extinction in the name of diversification. A TV reality show smells gold in Sam's story and decides to follow it. The clamor over Sam's rise becomes a careerdefining opportunity for black misfit Lionel Higgins (Tyler James Williams), when he is asked to join the school's lily-white newspaper staff to cover the controversy, even though he secretly knows little about black culture. Dear White People will be presented by York College Assistant Dean of Student Affairs Darrien Davenport who will discuss the ways in which this sharply satirical — and very funny — film engages with issues of race and diversity that touch the lives of students on college campuses across the country.
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Dear White People
with Assistant Dean of Student Affairs Darrien Davenport February 18, 2016 7:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218
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Réveil - Waking Up French with Eileen M. Angelini March 31, 2016 7:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218
Director Ben Levine’s Réveil - Waking Up French (2006) is a powerful documentary film that explores the struggle for cultural survival among the French-Canadian, FrancoAmerican communities of New England. The film traces the French heritage beginning with immigration from the Canadian provinces of Quebec and Acadia through persecution by Ku Klux Klan and language loss, to cultural renaissance and heritage preservation. Through their determined loyalty to the French Catholic faith, language, and cultural values, the French of New England continue to discover new ways of renewal and cultural diversity through heritage language reacquisition. Few people are more intimately familiar with Réveil - Waking Up French and its subject than Eileen M. Angelini, a Professor of French at Canisius College. She prepared a Teacher's Guide to the documentary at the director's request, and it has inspired her own work as a Fulbright scholar. She will be on hand to present the film, and give insight into the importance of history and heritage understanding and how languages can be reacquired for personal and community renewal.
Based on the novel of the same title by Jhumpa Lahiri, The Namesake (2006) is the story of the Ganguli family, whose move from Calcutta to New York means a lifelong balancing act to meld to a new world without forgetting the old. Although parents Ashoke (Irrfan Khan) and Ashima (Tabu) long for the family and culture that enveloped them in India, they take great pride in the opportunities their sacrifices have afforded their children. Paradoxically, their son Gogol (Kal Penn) is torn between finding his own unique identity without losing his heritage. Even Gogol's name represents the family's journey into the unknown. Two generations of Indian Americans must learn to negotiate two languages and cultures. In her introduction to The Namesake, Rhodes College Professor of Film Rashna Richards will focus on how in the movie, director Mira Nair adopts the framework of transnationalism to create a dynamic dialogue between convention and contemporaneity, and homeland and exile, such that home is forever lost and always beckoning. A Q&A session will follow the screening.
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The Namesake with Rashna Richards
April 21, 2016 7:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218
Sustainability & Environmental Studies
Intro
If we don't know where we have been, it is hard to know how to go forward. The challenge of sharing the roots of sustainability while bringing current perspectives to students is a balancing act for the sustainability and environmental studies program. This year's series captures that attempt. In the fall, we examine the recent history of sustainability. We start with a documentary that awakened many to environmental concerns. Next, we examine how contemporary issues in the American southwest are a result of our history with water management. We close out the semester with a discussion of the birth of Earth Day 45 years ago. In the spring, we turn to sustainable living. We open with a panel discussing how to "green your life." Next, we look at one of the hottest trends in housing — living in houses smaller than the average classroom. We end the year by hearing from a woman who found that the key to real happiness was by downsizing, er ‌ smart-sizing her life. Join us as we look to the past in order to see how to live now and for the future. Perhaps it is fitting that Thoreau's call for a simple life still resonates today.
As an undergraduate student at Harvard, Al Gore had a class with Roger Revelle, the prominent oceanographer and one of the first people to measure carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Gore credited this experience with providing the foundation of his own environmental awareness. Following the 2000 Presidential election, Gore returned to activism and public speaking on environmental matters. In 2004, work began on filming an expanded version of his presentations showing the danger of climate change. An Inconvenient Truth debuted at the Sundance Film Festival to wide acclaim from scientists and non-scientists for its ability to explain accurately and compellingly the scientific basis for what Gore characterized as a moral crisis. The film won Academy Awards for Best Documentary and Best Original Song – no other documentary had won two Oscars – and scores of awards from film festivals. Join us as we prepare for the 10th anniversary of the release of An Inconvenient Truth.
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An Inconvenient Truth September 9, 2015 7:00 p.m. Weinstock Lecture Hall Cosponsored by Peach Bottom Concerned Citizens Group
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Contami-Nation! and The Worth of Water October 22, 2015 7:00 p.m. Humanities Center 218 Cosponsored by Schmidt Library
The story of the American 20th century is one of growth in western cities and an embrace of "better living through chemistry." But what happens when our Herculean efforts to get and move water around the West, transforming arid deserts into oases, golf courses and suburban lawns start to run into the limits of available water? These issues are compounded when our limited water resources come into contact with the aftereffects of high production volume chemicals, endocrine-disrupting compounds, pharmaceuticals, and even our present-day personal care products. We examine these linked short documentaries from filmmaker Kirk Davis to see how our past and present are impacting our future possibilities. The buzz surrounding Contami-Nation! and The Worth of Water has continued to grow since they premiered as part of the sustainability programming at Arizona State University in 2014.
Drawing on The Genius of Earth Day: How a 1970 Teach-In Unexpectedly Made the First Green Generation (Hill and Wang, 2013), Adam Rome, will discuss what he terms the "most famous little-known event in modern American history." Rome, earned his B.A. from Yale University, studied as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, and worked for years as a journalist before earning his Ph.D. from the University of Kansas. He is the author of The Bulldozer in the Countryside: Suburban Sprawl and the Rise of American Environmentalism (Cambridge University Press, 2001), which won the Organization of American Historians' Frederick Jackson Turner Award for the best book on American history. Before joining the faculty of the University of Delaware as the Unidel Helen Gouldner Chair for the Environment, Rome taught at Penn State University. He currently teaches courses on environmental history and nonfiction environmental writing, blogs for the Huffington Post, and is the co-director of the University of Delaware's environmental-humanities initiative.
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The Genius of Earth Day: How a 1970 Teach-In Unexpectedly Made the First Green Generation: Lecture by Adam Rome
November 4, 2015 7:00 p.m. Weinstock Lecture Hall Book signing in lobby following the lecture. Cosponsored by the Department of History and Political Science
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Being Green: Your Lifestyle and Climate Change Panel Discussion
February 17, 2016 7:00 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall
This event is for those who want to live a lifestyle that reflects their desire for a healthy planet. This will be a practical, engaging discussion in which our four panelists will share their expertise on different ways the individual can make a positive environmental impact through consumer and lifestyle choices, including the food we eat, plants we grow, energy we consume, and cars we drive. Our panelists are Connie Schmotzer, Consumer Horticulture Educator at Penn State-York, who will discuss the importance of native plants and pollinator gardens; John Clay, farm manager at Longview Center for Agriculture (A Project of Greener Partners,) who will discuss permaculture and the importance of eating local, organically grown food; Eileen Reavey '13, Executive Director, United States Green Building Council (Central PA Chapter,) who will discuss the work of her organization and her reasons for choosing a vegan diet; and Bruno Soenen, a York homeowner, who will share the consumer perspective on adding solar and geothermal to his home, and switching to EV Plug-in and Diesel vehicles. If your carbon footprint is feeding rumors of the existence of Sasquatch, this event is for you.
5 Tiny is a film that follows one couple's attempt to build a tiny house while profiling other families who also have embraced the "smaller is better" approach to houses. As we learn more about the process of building a house that could fit in a parking spot, the film raises questions about design, home, and changing the American Dream. From 1970 to 2010, the average size of a new house in America has almost doubled. However, recently a small group of individuals has been redefining the American Dream to focus on flexibility, financial freedom, and quality of life, by designing and living in "Tiny Houses" that are usually under 160 square feet. After its premier at SXSW (Austin, TX) in 2013, Tiny was nominated for awards at multiple festivals, including the HotDocs (Toronto), Docs NYC, and Independent Film Festival Boston. It was the 2013 winner of the Green Planet Award from the Rhode Island International Film Festival. Our April 21 speaker, Tammy Strobel, is featured in this film.
Tiny: A Story About Small Living Film
March 15, 2016, 7:00 p.m. Weinstock Lecture Hall Cosponsored by Schmidt Library
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You Can Buy Happiness (and It's Cheap) Lecture by Tammy Strobel
April 21, 2016 7:00 p.m. Weinstock Lecture Hall Cosponsored by Sustainability and Environmental Studies Committee
Tammy Strobel is a writer, photographer and teacher. A few years ago, she and her husband exchanged their "normal middle-class lifestyle" for life in a 128-square-foot tiny house, now located in Little Shasta, CA. She created her blog, RowdyKittens.com, to share her story of embracing simplicity. Since then, Tammy's story has been featured by The New York Times, CNN, The Today Show, USA Today, and a variety of other media outlets. Her latest book is You Can Buy Happiness (and It’s Cheap). Tammy spends her free time taking photos, walking and hanging out with friends and family. She lives in northern CA with her husband, Logan, and two cats.
Theatre requires a community: to produce, to design, to act, and to attend. Please join our community for a season of comedy, drama, mystery and intrigue. Each year, the York College Theatre Division presents productions in the Waldner Performing Arts Center and the Perko Theatre. Performances are directed by Theatre majors and Theatre faculty. All York College students are encouraged to audition. Productions are free and open to members of the College and the community as part of York College's Cultural Series. The 2015-2016 season features a variety of plays, including both classic and contemporary selections.
Theatre
Intro
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by Tom Stoppard October 28 - 31, 2015 7:30 p.m. Perko Theatre
by George Bernard Shaw November 4 - 7, 2015 7:30 p.m. Perko Theatre
by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa November 18 - 21, 2015 7:30 p.m. Perko Theatre
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Real Inspector Hound
The Real Inspector Hound is about two theatre critics, Moon and Birdboot, who are set to review a murder mystery play. However, the play seems to mirror what is happening to the two critics. The characters and their experiences in the play-within-the-play become entwined with the characters of Moon and Birdboot. The two critics become part of the play, leading to an intersection between the worlds within and outside the play.
Arms and the Man
Set during the Serbo-Bulgarian War in the late 19th century, this comedy focuses on the lives and loves of a Bulgarian woman and her family, their servants, a Bulgarian soldier, and a Swiss soldier. Romances are kindled, but are they with the right people? As relationships are made and broken, this play sheds light on issues of love, family, war, and duty.
Abigail/1702
This drama tells the story of the life of Abigail Williams following the events of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. After escaping from the Salem witch trials, Abigail tries to create a new life for herself, and she must try to come to terms with what she did during the trials. When her old life collides with her new life, Abigail is forced to confront her actions and find forgiveness.
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A Christmas Carol
Ten-Minute Plays: Hour 4 The Dinner Party March 16 - 19, 2016 7:30 p.m. Perko Theatre
by Neil Simon April 6 - 9, 2016 7:30 p.m. Perko Theatre
In this adaptation of Charles Dickens’ classic holiday story, Ebenezer Scrooge, a miserly old man, gets a visit from the ghost of his old business partner, Jacob Marley. Marley warns Scrooge that he will see three spirits in the next three nights: the ghosts of Christmases Past, Present, and Yet to Come. These spirits try to help Scrooge change his ways and become more joyful.
Join us for our fourth presentation of short plays chosen from the National Ten-Minute Play Contest and the Humana Festival. These events introduce new and upcoming playwrights and plays to the world of theatre, originally produced at The Actor's Theatre of Louisville. Despite their brevity, these shows are packed with a combination of comedy and drama for the enjoyment of all.
The topics of marriage and divorce lead to a play with comedy, farce, and drama. Six people show up to a party in Paris, only to discover that they are three couples that have gone through divorces. The question is: who invited them? Without the host, the couples begin to revisit their pasts and their marriages. These failed relationships are the focus of this one-act play.
by Charles Dickens December 9 - 11, 2015 1:00 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
Special Events
Intro
Each year, York College hosts a series of special presentations sponsored by a variety of departments and offices on campus. These events bring particularly noteworthy speakers, performances, and artists to campus to address timely and relevant topics. The Center for Professional Excellence will announce the Spring 2016 Vizzi Family Lectureship keynote speaker this fall. Previous speakers have included Gold medalist Mia Hamm and John Walsh, victims' rights advocate and host of America's Most Wanted show. Stay tuned for exciting news about the next speaker, and please visit www.ycp.edu/cpe for additional information. The ChloĂŠ Eichelberger Business Education Series lecture also will be chosen later in the year. Go to www.ycp.edu to learn more about this popular event.
Set in Bamberg, SC, in 1936, the play centers on an African-American family, which is grieving over the loss of a loved one who has been lynched. In a sad commentary on historical societal norms in the South, "an estimated two or three blacks were lynched each week in the late 19th and early 20th centuries," according to PBS.org. The play does not depict the act of the lynching (viz., there are no gruesome images); rather it focuses on the strength of the family and the difficult decision it must make as a result of the tragedy. The play also reveals a long-held secret, which threatens to unravel the fabric of the family.
The Pulse of Mourning celebrates the resilience of families to rise above adversity, to unite in spite of differences, and create pathways of success for future generations. These are accomplishments not just reserved for African-American families but also embraced by families of every ethnic group. The play was written in 2004 by Harrisburg educator and playwright Dorothy E. King, and performed for the Penn State Harrisburg 7th annual commemoration of the Martin Luther King Holiday.
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The Pulse of Mourning: A play by Dorothy E. King Performance: September 19, 2015 7:00 p.m. Reception: September 19 6:00 p.m. Waldner Performing Arts Center
The Pulse of Mourning Lead Actors Monika Ross and David Payne
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Frederick Douglass and his Many Lincolns 2015 Langston Lincoln Lecture by David W. Blight October 8, 2015 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Book signing to follow. Cosponsored by the Schmidt Library and the Department of History and Political Science
David W. Blight is Class of 1954 Professor of American History at Yale University and Director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition at Yale. Blight has written widely on abolitionism, American historical memory, and African American intellectual and cultural history. His Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory (Harvard University Press, 2001) was awarded the Bancroft Prize, the Abraham Lincoln Prize, and the Frederick Douglass Prize, and his American Oracle: The Civil War in the Civil Rights Era (Harvard University Press, 2011) received the Anisfield-Wolf Award for best book in nonfiction on racism and human diversity. He is currently writing a new biography of Frederick Douglass that will be published by Simon and Schuster. Blight has served on the boards of the New York Historical Society, the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati, and the National Civil War Center at Tredegar in Richmond, VA, and as part of a small team of advisors to the 9/11 Memorial and Museum curatorial team. He has published reviews in news outlets including The New York Times, Washington Post Book World, the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, and Slate.com.
What if the judge in Kitzmiller had ruled that ID was legal to teach? Very little would change in the science community where ID repeatedly has been shown to lack scientific merit. But the politicization of education and science would have increased exponentially. Eugenie C. Scott and Kenneth R. Miller will explore the legal, political, scientific, and educational implications of the trial and its aftermath. Miller is Professor of Biology at Brown University. A cell biologist, he coauthored the nation's leading high school biology textbook with Joseph S. Levine. He served as lead witness in the Kitzmiller v. Dover trial on evolution and intelligent design. In 2011, he was awarded the Stephen Jay Gould Prize from the Society for the Study of Evolution. Scott is the former Executive Director of the National Center for Science Education, which defends the teaching of evolution and climate change. She has been honored for her NCSE work by education and science societies, including the Public Welfare Medal from the National Academy of Sciences, and honorary degrees from nine universities. She and the NCSE staff advised the plaintiffs' legal team in the Kitzmiller trial.
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What if Intelligent Design Had Won? Reflecting on 10 Years After Kitzmiller vs. Dover Lecture by Eugenie C. Scott and Kenneth R. Miller
November 5, 2015 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Cosponsored by Biology, Chemistry, and Education Departments
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The Road to Peace by Paul K. Chappell
Lecture: November 11, 2015 5:15 p.m. DeMeester Recital Hall Reception: November 11 6:45 p.m. Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby Cosponsored by York College Art Galleries
From waging war to waging peace, from multiracial outcast to advocate for humanity, West Point graduate and Nuclear Age Peace Foundation Leadership Director Paul K. Chappell offers a new vision of hope, radical empathy, and a world beyond violence and war. An Iraq war veteran and former U.S. Army Captain, Chappell grew up in AL with a Korean immigrant mother and a part-African-American/partCaucasian father. Growing up in a violent household, Chappell now teaches the powerful form of leadership practiced by Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., grounded in nonviolence skills and action, and essential for solving today's challenges. Chappell is an international speaker on humanity and violence, why world peace is possible, and the art of waging peace. He has also authored a seven-book series about waging peace, ending war, the art of living, and what it means to be human. The series is a resource for anyone who wants to understand how positive change happens on both the global and personal levels.
Dr. William "Bill" Thomas is an author, geriatrician, entrepreneur, musician, teacher, farmer, and visionary, whose wide-ranging work explores the terrain of human aging. Dr. Thomas, one of the most innovative thinkers in medicine, explains that a new life phase is beginning to emerge within our society. When the Baby Boomer generation came of age in the 1960s and 1970s, they jump-started a cultural revolution that shaped today's society. Predicting that Boomers will choose the path of the Denialist, the Realist or the Enthusiast, he discusses the behaviors and attitudes that will provide new and more nourishing fuel for the rest of life's journey: hope and a renewed sense of all that is possible. Dr. Thomas is an international authority on geriatric medicine and eldercare, and he challenges us to change the way we think about aging and elderhood. Dr. Thomas will guide us on the journey to embracing aging.
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The Journey to Embracing Aging with Dr. Bill Thomas
January 25, 2016 3:00-4:30 p.m. Book signing immediately following. 2nd Floor Reception Area . Waldner Performing Arts Center Cosponsored by the Hahn Home Fund of York County Community Foundation's Embracing Aging Initiative, the Behavioral Sciences and Nursing Departments, and the Office of Intercultural Student Life and Global Programming.
Robert Weisbuch October 22, 2015 7:00 p.m. Weinstock Lecture Hall
Valuing the Liberal Arts Today
Robert Weisbuch is an internationally recognized leader in higher education and an American literature scholar specializing in the poetry of Emily Dickinson. He is currently President and CEO of Robert Weisbuch and Associates, a higher education consulting firm. From 2005 to 2012, he served as the 11th president of Drew University in Madison, NJ. His longtime commitment to understanding the liberal arts as a centerpiece of higher education has made him a highly soughtafter commentator on such issues as developing college and community engagement, effectively using technology in teaching, and implementing holistic criteria for college admission.
Julia Reinhard Lupton April 7, 2016 7:00 p.m. Weinstock Lecture Hall
Becoming a Creative Citizen through the Arts and Humanities
Julia Reinhard Lupton, The University of California, Irvine, is Professor of English and Comparative Literature and Associate Dean of Research in the School of Humanities. She is a widely recognized scholar in English Renaissance literature, a Trustee of the Shakespeare Association of America, and a strong advocate for bringing the humanities into the public sphere. Her recent book, Thinking with Shakespeare: Essays on Politics and Life (University of Chicago Press, 2011), explores the ways in which selected plays by Shakespeare speak directly to the politics of his time and to the way we live now.
The York College of Pennsylvania Center for Civic Arts and Humanities Victor E. Taylor, Director 2015-2016 Scholars -in-Residence Lectures York College of Pennsylvania has an enduring commitment to the economic, cultural, and educational betterment of the greater York region, especially the City of York. The newly formed York College of Pennsylvania Center for Civic Arts and Humanities, a "Great to Greater Fund" initiative, drawing on the intellectual capital and energy of YCP faculty, staff, students, and alumni, represents the next stage of civic, intellectual, cultural, and economic engagement with the greater York area community. The Center's mission is supported by faculty from across many academic disciplines, and is dedicated to enhancing and expanding learning and scholarship opportunities for faculty, students, alumni, staff, and community members.
2015-2016 Cultural Series Calendar AUGUST 2015
OCTOBER 2015
August 24–September 19, 2015, Melanie M. Rodgers: The Lettering Office Exhibition, Brossman Gallery. Artist Lecture: Stop Learning New Things, September 3, 5:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: September 3, 6:30 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
October 1-November 14, 2015, Perspectives on Peace Exhibition: Art and Peace-building. York College Galleries. Panel Discussion: Art and Conflict, October 14, 5:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: October 14, 6:30 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
August 24–September 19, 2015, Driven: Contemporary American Printmaking Exhibition, Cora Miller Gallery. Artist Demonstration: September 3, 1:00-5:00 p.m., outside Wolf Hall. Reception: September 3, 6:30 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
October 3, 2015, PRISM Concert, A Division of Music Showcase, 4:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center
SEPTEMBER 2015 September 4, 2015, Hard Pressed: Selections from the DBP Collection — First Friday with Drive By Press, York College Galleries at Marketview Arts, 37 West Philadelphia St., York. Printing Demonstration, 3:008:00 p.m., Marketview Arts Entrance. Exhibition/Reception, 5:00-8:00 p.m., Coni Wolf Gallery, York College Studios, Marketview Arts September 9, 2015, Public Humanities Panel I: Defining the Public Arts and Humanities, 3:305:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218 September 9, 2015, An Inconvenient Truth, 7:00 p.m., Weinstock Lecture Hall September 17, 2015, Justina Ireland, Visiting Writer Lecture, 5:00 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Art Galleries. September 17, 2015, Public Humanities: Doris Sommer, The Work of Art in the World: Civic Agency and Public Humanities, 7:009:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218 September 18, 2015, Guest Artist Recital: Ron Brendel, tenor, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall September 19, 2015, The Pulse of Mourning, Performance,7:00-10:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center. Reception, September 19, 2015, 6:00-7:00 p.m. September 24, 2015, Z for Zachariah, with Director Craig Zobel, 7:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218 September 27 2015, Faculty Recital: York Chamber Players, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
October 8, 2015, Frederick Douglass and his Many Lincolns, 2015 Langston Lincoln Lecture by David W. Blight, 7:00-8:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall October 15, 2015, A Most Violent Year, with Producer Neal Dodson, 7:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center October 22, 2015, Contami-Nation! and The Worth of Water, 7:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218 October 22, 2015, Robert Weisbuch: Valuing the Liberal Arts Today,20152016 Scholars-in-Residence, Public Lecture, 7:00 p.m., Weinstock Lecture Hall October 23, 2015, Faculty Recital: Alicia Kosack, Flute, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall October 28-31, 2015, The Real Inspector Hound by Tom Stoppard, 7:30 p.m., Perko Theatre October 29, 2015, Italian Songs and Arias, YCP Community of Singers, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall October 29, 2015, Christopher DeWeese, Visiting Writer Lecture, 5:00 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Art Galleries.
NOVEMBER 2015 November 4, 2015, The Genius of Earth Day: How a 1970 Teach-In Unexpectedly Made the First Green Generation, lecture by Adam Rome, 7:00 p.m., Weinstock Lecture Hall November 4-7, 2015, Arms and the Man by George Bernard Shaw, 7:30 p.m., Perko Theatre
November 5, 2015, What if Intelligent Design Had Won? Reflecting on 10 Years After Kitzmiller v Dover, lecture by Eugenie C. Scott and Kenneth R. Miller, 7:009:00 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall November 5, 2015, Guest Lecture: Terry Botwick, Film and Television Executive, 7:30 p.m., Weinstock Lecture Hall November 7, 2015, Guest Artist Concert: Axiom Brass, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall November 8, 2015, Wind Symphony – James Colonna, Director, 3:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center November 11, 2015, The Road To Peace lecture by Paul K. Chappell: 5:15 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception, 6:45 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby November 15, 2015, Fall Choral Concert: Common Ground – Grace Muzzo and Christine Kates, Directors, 3:00 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall November 18-21, 2015, Abigail/1702 by Roberto AguirreSacasa, 7:30 p.m., Perko Theatre November 19, 2015, Groove Ensemble – Jeff Stabley, Director, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
December 12, 2015, Community Orchestra – Zachary Levi, Director, 3:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center December 13, 2015, Holiday Festival Concert – James Colonna and Grace Muzzo, Directors, 3:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center December 14, 2015, Student Piano & Chamber Music: Invitation to the Dance, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
JANUARY 2016 January 20–February 20, 2016, Sue Coe: Porkopolis: Animals and Industry Exhibition, Cora Miller Gallery. Artist Lecture: January 28, 5:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: January 28, 6:30 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby January 20-February 20, 2016, Sue Coe: Pit's Letter Exhibition, Brossman Gallery. Artist Lecture: January 28, 5:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: January 28, 6:30 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby January 25, 2016, The Journey to Embracing Aging: An Evening with Dr. Bill Thomas, 3:00-4:30 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center.
November 19, 2015, Hollidaysburg, with Director Anna Martemucci, 7:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218
January 28, 2016, Sue Coe: Graphic Witness Artist Lecture, 5:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: January 28, 6:30 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
November 20, 2015, Jazz Ensemble – Jeff Stabley, Director, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
FEBRUARY 2016
November 22, 2015, Faculty Recital: The York Chamber Players perform music for woodwinds & piano, 3:00 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
DECEMBER 2015 December 1, 2015, Guest Artist Recital: Nittany Trombone Quartet, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall December 4–19, 2015, Fine Art and Graphic Design Senior Exhibition, York College Galleries, Senior Presentations: December 4, 4:00 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: December 4, 5:30-7:00 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby December 9-11, 2015, A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens, 1:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center
February 11, 2016, Faculty Recital: Songs of Shakespeare, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall February 17, 2016, Panel Discussion: Being Green: Your Lifestyle and Climate Change, 7:00 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall February 18, 2016, Ryan Britt, Visiting Writer Lecture, 5:00 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Art Galleries. February 18, 2016, Dear White People, with Assistant Dean of Student Affairs Darrien Davenport, 7:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218 February 24, 2016, Luba Lukova: Graphic Guts Visiting Artist Lecture, 5:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: February 24, 6:30 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
February 25, 2016, Rebecca Morgan: No Church in the Wild, Lecture, 5:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: February 25, 5:00 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby
MARCH 2016 March 10-23, 2016, Annual Juried Student Exhibition, York College Galleries. Reception: March 10, 5:00-7:00 p.m. Graphic Design Juror: Luba Lukova. Fine Art Juror: Rebecca Morgan March 10, 2016, Guest Lecture by Jay L. Cooper, Entertainment Attorney, Simplicity, the Other Side of Complexity: Music, Law, and the Future of E-Commerce, 7:30 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center
April 8, 2016, Chamber Voices – Grace Muzzo and Christine Kates, Directors, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall April 13, 2016, Public Humanities Panel II: Practicing the Public Arts and Humanities, 3:30-5:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218 April 14, 2016, Percussion Ensemble – Malavika Godbole, Director, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall April 15, 2016, Guest Artist Recital: The Lydian String Quartet, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall April 17, 2016, Spring Pops – Grace Muzzo, Director, 3:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center
March 11, 2016, Faculty/Guest Recital: The York Chamber Players & Mobius Percussion,7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
April 21, 2016, Groove Ensemble – Jeff Stabley, Director, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall
March 15, 2016, Film: Tiny: A Story About Small Living, 7:00 p.m., Weinstock Lecture Hall
April 21, 2016, The Namesake, with Rashna Richards, 7:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218
March 16-19, 2016, Ten-Minute Plays: Hour 4, 7:30 p.m., Perko Theatre
April 21, 2016, Tammy Strobel Lecture: You Can Buy Happiness (and It's Cheap), 7:00 p.m., Weinstock Lecture Hall
March 17, 2016, Public Humanities: Juanamaría Cordones-Cook, AfroCuban Artists and the Culture of Resistance, guest speaker, 7:009:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218 March 20, 2016, Wind Symphony – James Colonna, Director, 3:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center March 31, 2016, Réveil - Waking Up French, with Eileen M. Angelini, 7:00 p.m., Humanities Center 218
APRIL 2016 April 1–14, 2016, Senior Exhibition: Graphic Design , York College Galleries, Senior Presentations: April 1, 4:00 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: April 1, 5:30-7:00 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby April 6-9, 2016, The Dinner Party by Neil Simon, 7:30 p.m., Perko Theatre April 7, 2016, Julia Reinhard Lupton: Becoming a Creative Citizen Through the Arts and Humanities, 2015-2016 Scholars-in-Residence, Public Lecture, 7:00 p.m., Weinstock Lecture Hall
April 22–May 7, 2016, Fine Art Senior Exhibition, York College Galleries, Senior Presentations: April 22, 4:00 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall. Reception: April 22, 5:30-7:00 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby April 22, 2016, Jazz Ensemble – Jeff Stabley, Director, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall April 28, 29, 30, 2016, The Pirates of Penzance, Erin Lippard, Director, 7:30 p.m.Waldner Performing Arts Center
MAY 2016 May 5, 2016, Student Piano and Chamber Music: A Little Night Music, 7:30 p.m., DeMeester Recital Hall May 7, 2016, Community Orchestra – Zachary Levi, Director, 3:00 p.m., Waldner Performing Arts Center
JUNE 2016 June 9–July 2, 2016, Anya Felch '15, Appell Fellowship Exhibition,York College Galleries, Reception: June 9, 5:00-7:00 p.m., Evelyn and Earle Wolf Hall Lobby. Artist Talk: June 9, 6:00 p.m., Cora Miller Gallery.
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2. York College Galleries & DeMeester Recital Hall in Wolf Hall
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3. Waldner Performing Arts Center and Perko Theatre
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